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Vira Kravchuk


New prisoner exchange of seriously wounded: Ukrainian soldier celebrates birthday upon release from Russian captivity

All released personnel suffered from severe medical conditions including weight loss, dystrophy, ulcers, vision and digestive problems and cardiovascular diseases.
Seriously ill and wounded Ukrainian defenders return home after years in Russian captivity in a new prisoner exchange on 19 June that resulted from 2 June Istanbul peace talks.
Seriously ill and wounded Ukrainian defenders return home after years in Russian captivity in a new prisoner exchange on 19 June that resulted from 2 June Istanbul peace talks. Photo: Photo: @dmytro_lubinetzs/Telegram
New prisoner exchange of seriously wounded: Ukrainian soldier celebrates birthday upon release from Russian captivity

Ukraine and Russia conducted another prisoner exchange on 19 June, focusing on seriously ill and wounded captives, some of which were held in Russian captivity for over three years. 

This exchange follows an agreement reached during negotiations in Istanbul on 2 June, when Ukraine and Russia agreed to prioritize exchanging all seriously wounded and ill prisoners of war, plus all military personnel aged 18 to 25, rather than focusing on numerical parity. 
The talks, however, failed to produce any ceasefire agreement over the deep divide between Kyiv’s and Moscow’s stances on the war. 
Ukrainian POWs are also systematically tortured in Russian captivity and denied medical care. More than 95% of released Ukrainian POWs report experiencing torture, including physical beatings with objects like rebar and bricks, electrocution, sexual violence, and psychological abuse.

The exchange returned Ukrainian defenders from multiple military branches to their homeland, including personnel from the Armed Forces, Naval Forces, Airborne Assault Forces, Territorial Defense Forces, National Guard, and State Border Service. Officials did not disclose the exact number of prisoners released.

According to the Coordination Staff for Treatment of Prisoners of War, all returned defenders suffered from significant health complications.

“Every Defender released today has serious medical diagnoses and illnesses as a result of injuries and being in captivity,” the coordination staff reported. “Many have significant weight loss, dystrophy, ulcers, vision problems, musculoskeletal diseases, cardiovascular diseases and digestive problems.”

The oldest released prisoner was 63 years old, while one defender celebrated his 45th birthday upon returning home, according to according to Ukraine’s human rights commissioner Dmytro Lubinets.

Ukrainian defender who returned from Russian captivity on 19 June, on the day of his 45th birthday. Photo: @dmytro_lubinetzs/Telegram

Since the Istanbul talks on 2 June, Ukraine has conducted multiple exchanges: 9 June saw the return of prisoners under 25 years old, 10 June brought back seriously wounded and ill personnel, 12 June returned another group of seriously wounded and ill defenders, and 14 June marked the fourth exchange within a week, including seriously ill, wounded, and young prisoners.